Shoulder impingement syndrome is one of the most prevalent upper extremity complaints among veterans, yet it's frequently dismissed as a normal consequence of aging. For veterans who spent careers lifting, throwing, carrying, and working overhead, impingement is often a direct product of service, and it's ratable.
Shoulder impingement occurs when the tendons of the rotator cuff, particularly the supraspinatus tendon, are compressed between the head of the humerus and the acromion (the bony roof of the shoulder) during arm elevation. The repeated mechanical compression inflames and, over time, structurally damages the tendon.
The condition exists on a spectrum:
Many veterans progress through the spectrum without awareness, attributing the worsening pain to "getting older."
The military demands that are hardest on the shoulder include:
The common thread is repetitive overhead or forward-flexed arm positioning that narrows the subacromial space and compresses the rotator cuff structures with each repetition.
Direct service connection is appropriate when:
If you had any pre-existing shoulder problem before enlistment, military service may have aggravated the impingement beyond its natural progression. A pre-existing condition that was asymptomatic or minimally symptomatic before service and significantly worsened during service is aggravated, not simply a pre-existing condition to be excluded.
Shoulder impingement can also arise secondarily from other service-connected conditions. A service-connected cervical spine condition may cause altered shoulder mechanics or referred pain that accelerates impingement. A contralateral shoulder injury that forces overuse of the affected side creates a secondary mechanism as well.
The shoulder is rated under 38 CFR Part 4, based on the dominant vs. non-dominant arm and the range of motion limitation.
Diagnostic Codes 5200-5203 cover various shoulder and clavicle conditions. For impingement specifically, the rating typically follows limitation of motion of the arm:
The painful motion rule under 38 CFR 4.59 applies: pain that limits functional range of motion must be documented and considered.
If impingement has progressed to a rotator cuff tear, see our companion article on rotator cuff tears in veterans for rating details specific to that diagnosis.
Stage 2 shoulder impingement is not a stable condition. Fibrosis and tendinitis, if unaddressed and unrated, progress to Stage 3: partial or full-thickness rotator cuff tears. A supraspinatus tear rated at 30% to 40% under DC 5201 represents a significantly higher VA rating than impingement alone.
For veterans currently at Stage 2, that means the value of the claim is not what it is today. It's what it will be in five years when the tendon has partially torn. An unrated, untreated impingement today is a torn rotator cuff tomorrow, and that future higher-value claim depends on having the service connection established now.
Filing immediately accomplishes two things. It locks in an effective date, which matters for back pay if the rating is later increased as the condition worsens. And it establishes service connection before the condition changes, which removes the VA's ability to argue that the tear represents a separate, post-service injury unrelated to the claimed impingement.
See our companion article on rotator cuff tears in veterans to understand what the rating picture looks like when Stage 3 is reached.
A shoulder impingement claim needs:
Many shoulder claims are denied on the nexus because raters focus on whether a single traumatic event is documented. The cumulative repetitive stress mechanism is equally valid but requires a nexus letter that explains the biomechanical pathway in detail.
For help evaluating the strength of your nexus documentation, Flat Rate Nexus offers a free nexus letter grader and physician-signed independent medical opinions at flatratenexus.com.
Thinking about your own claim? Every nexus letter we write goes through a full physician record review, cites peer-reviewed research, and is built around the actual evidence in your case.
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